Seven Strategies to Train Kids this Ramadan
By: Shehnaz Toorawa
The Prophet (pbuh) said, “No father has given a greater gift to his
children than good moral training.” (Tirmidhi)
The many aspects of Ramadan—fasting, prayers, moral values, charity,
Quran, family, Eid-- provide a valuable opportunity to train kids. Whether they
are your own kids or kids you teach, education or training isn’t an automatic
or easy process. Children don’t bring empty minds and fill them with what
we say. Training requires effort, energy and a few techniques to take off.
Here are some training tips and techniques to transform your children’s
minds and memories this Ramadan:
1) Let them get their Hands Dirty
“The great aim of education is not knowledge, but action.”
Herbert Spencer
Children learn by “doing”. On average, students retain
75% of a lesson when they learn through hands-on activities compared to 5% through
a lecture or 10% through reading (Brunmer, Jerome, “The Process
of Learning”).
If, for example, you want to teach your kids the concept of Zakat, get them
to help you calculate your Zakat, decide where to send the money, and mail the
envelopes. Action and implementation can occur while children learn,
not necessarily after!
The Prophet (pbuh) used to bring his grandchildren, Hassan and Hussain, to
the Masjid as toddlers, before they knew how to pray.
A concept becomes real and important to children when they experience
it rather than simply read about it. They’ll remember how to
do it years later when you may catch them telling their friends, “I’ve
been calculating Zakat since I was a kid!”
2) Involve their Emotions
When children get emotionally involved in an activity, they rarely want to
leave it. Video games and TV shows target children’s emotions. As parents
and educators, we can use the same technique for training.
Stories, songs, skits, crafts and games grab children’s emotions. Once
a child is interested and excited, she is more likely to stay attentive till
the end and get the message you want to give. Just as we remember events
in our lives that were emotionally significant, children remember concepts learned
through activities that were “fun”, “funny”, “exciting”
or “different”.
Don’t be afraid to stir some fun into your training—you don’t
have to lose any content. Write a song about Eid, create a hadith treasure box,
organize a Ramadan trivia night, or read a story about Ramadan in Madinah. If
they enjoy it, the kids will come back for more!
3) Reveal the Purpose
We often hear students complain, “Why do we have to do this?” or
“This math exercise is pointless”. Unfortunately, we often hear
responses like, “Because I’m telling you to,” “Because
you have to”, or worse, “You’ll get a new CD player if you
finish the book”.
Like us, if children don’t see the purpose or importance of an
action, they won’t have the motivation to complete it. To avoid
getting similar comments from your kids about prayer or fasting, make sure they
understand the purpose. Before you begin any lesson, whether it’s a story
about the companions of the Prophet or an Eid craft, explain exactly why you
are the doing the activity and what benefits the children will gain from it.
Remind your children that they are doing acts of worship to please
Allah, not you. Explain why we need to please Allah and how every action,
including washing dishes or math homework, will help us achieve that goal. If
children are praying only to please you, when you leave, their motivation and
prayers will disappear.
If children are motivated to fast Ramadan or complete the Quran for
a material incentive (like a CD player), they may never develop a love of Allah
or an intrinsic desire to perform the action. They may, instead, learn
to value material rewards and when the rewards disappear, the actions may disappear
with them.
Help your children understand that, for Muslims, rewards don’t
necessarily come in this life. They may have to wait for the bigger
and better rewards of the hereafter.
4) Highlight the Big Ideas
“Education is what remains after one has forgotten everything he
learned in school.”
Albert Einstein
Ask yourself how many equations or formulas you remember from your Grade 12
Math textbook. It may be five or two or none. Let’s be honest—most
of us retained very little of the details we learned.
Children will not retain all the fiqh rulings of Zakat or Wudu or Salah….and
they won’t need to! Make sure the little that they retain is exactly
what you want them to remember. Focus on the big ideas, such as the
awareness that Allah is watching us, that we get our rulings from the Quran
and the Sunnah, that prayer is a means of self-purification, etc. Repeat these
ideas every day in different ways. While your children instil these principles
in their minds, show them how to learn the rest on their own, when they need
it.
Help your kids learn “how to learn”. Teach them
where to find the fiqh information they need or how to do research on a topic
and who to ask for information. They will be better prepared if they master
the basics and know how to get the specifics. Memorizing every ruling will be
a waste of their time and yours.
5) Let them Lead!
Children often take responsibilities more seriously than adults.
The Prophet (pbuh) appointed Usamah ibn Zaid, a young boy, as commander of the
Muslim army although many older and more experienced Sahabi were present. The
Prophet (pbuh) trusted Usamah’s capability for the position.
Give children leadership over important tasks and step out of the picture.
Assign one child to wake up all his siblings for Suhur. Let someone else be
in charge of updating the Iftar time every evening. Allow the children to plan,
budget and buy Eid gifts for all the relatives. Let them choose which
task they want to “be in charge of”.
Allow children to make mistakes and realize on their own what they
should have done. Experience often trains better than instruction.
Once a child goes out into the cold without a jacket, he’ll remember,
before you can remind him, to put on his jacket next time.
Train kids to be responsible for their own learning. If a
child asks, “Does brushing teeth break my fast?” a simple “yes”
or “no” may give her the answer, but won’t provide any long-term
training. Ask her instead, “Where can you look to find that answer? Let’s
do some research.”
Begin the month of Ramadan by asking your children to do a research project
on what breaks the fast and what does not. If they find the information themselves,
they are likely to remember it and know exactly where to get it again next year.
"The only person who is educated is the one who has learned how to
learn and change."
Carl Rogers
6) Get Excited!
“Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire.”
W. B. Yeats
Kids catch on to your enthusiasm. Show some excitement and
passion about the topic you’re teaching. Show your kids that you “can’t
wait” for Ramadan to begin. Be cheerful at prayer times. Decorate the
house in anticipation of Eid.
The Prophet (pbuh) taught by example. His character and actions motivated people
to love and emulate him. Be the example you want your kids to be.
Make a genuine effort to love the activities you want your kids to love.
7) Combine Love with Learning
The Prophet (pbuh) would greet children warmly by hugging them, kissing them
and picking them up.
Abu Huraira reported that al-Aqra' b. Habis saw the Prophet (pbuh) kissing
Hasan. He said: I have ten children, but I have never kissed any one of them,
whereupon Allah's Messenger (pbuh) said: He who does not show mercy (towards
his children), no mercy would be shown to him. (Muslim)
Show children that you love them, regardless of how they perform.
Allow each child to progress at his own pace. Saying, “look at
your cousin Aminah—she’s already finished the fifteenth juz”,
will only lower your child’s self-esteem and discourage what she’s
already accomplishing.
Excessive competition and comparison can often result in helplessness and lack
of motivation for children who learn in different ways or at a slower pace.
Allow children to judge their own progress and compare themselves to
their former level rather than that of others.
Make this Ramadan the beginning of a memorable and long-lasting training
experience for you and your children!
Date Created: 9/26/2005
Date/Time Last Modified: 9/27/2005 9:20:19 AM
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